I have a feedmill near me that will custom make blends of feed as long as you order 300 lbs of it. I get 2 parts corn meal , 1 part soy bean hulls, one 1 citrus pulp, and a ten pounds of dehydrated calf milk. I figure its just as good a worm chow. lol

Some feed stores may not be able order it, like tractor supply in my area although they carry several Mazuri animal feed products. I have usually paid from 20-25 to get it ordered. It is well worth it. Saves a lot of labor. If you have several bins they can generate a lot of work. If you are breeding worms casting are a waste by-product of course you are raising worms for castings then chow isn't the way to go. If you are producing castings (not vermicompost) the ratio is about 10 to 1 raw materials to finished castings

Everybody, hello. What would be an ideal diet to feed the bins to maximize casting production? I am herding EF's and am looking to enrich my garden with as much as quickly as possible. What about organic?

I got a fifty pound sack of Purina yesterday. It was full of meal bugs and I think the date code on the stitching band says 2001, I'm sure the worms can compost it, I just would have liked a fresh batch for my latest experiment.

My feed store was supposed to get from the distributor last week, well I guess the order didn't make the deadline, so it was supposed to be this week. Delivery came and worm chow not on truck again. They found another store that they trade with, and they had a bag in stock. I bet it had been around for quite some time.

I will call Purina hotline on Monday and talk to them to see if it makes any difference. Possibly the aging will be beneficial. Purina has satisfaction guarantee so I am confident with my purchase.

I put the sack in a garbage bag and vacuumed for twenty minutes, attempting a natural pest control method.